• OS: GNU Guix
  • WM: dwl-guile
  • Status Bar: dtao-guile
  • Text Editor: GNU Emacs
  • Web Browser: Nyxt
  • Menu Prompt: bemenu + j4-dmenu-desktop

First screenshot: Emacs and Nyxt side by side editing config files.

Second screenshot: Tubo playing a music queue in Chromium.

Dotfiles

  • Ramin Honary@lemmy.ml
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    11 months ago

    Woah, woah, woah… there is a Wayland compositor called DWL and a status bard called DTao that can be scripted using Guile Scheme?! Holy shit!

    Now I know exactly what I am going to do as soon as my Linux distro swtiches over to Wayland.

    And kudos also for using Nyxt and Emacs. The Lisp runs strong in this one.

    • nuclide@lemmy.worldOP
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      11 months ago

      Thanks! Ever since I used Emacs for the first time I wished I could have a fully Lisp-based configuration for my whole system, and Guix glues them all in pretty neatly

  • Ramin Honary@emacs.ch
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    11 months ago

    @nuclide has setup their Linux desktop in the most Lispy way possible: #GuileScheme bindings in order to program the #Wayland compositor (DWL) and the status bar (DTao), #Nyxt for the web browser (#CommonLisp bindings to #webkit ) and #Emacs as the text editor.

    The only way you could be more truly a #Lisp fan is if you ran an emulator of the CADR Lisp Machine and used ZMacs as your text editor instead, and annoyingly argue with everyone that Scheme is not actually Lisp (cough @amszmidt cough)

    https://lemmy.world/post/10112192

    • nuclide@lemmy.worldOP
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      11 months ago

      No, it’s a renderer-agnostic browser built with Common Lisp from the ground up. It currently uses WebkitGTK as its official renderer but there is Blink support planned for early next year via its Electron port.